Tiger Woods to play this week in WGC-Cadillac

Mar. 5, 2014
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Tiger Woods grabs his back after his drive on the ninth hole and would later withdraw in the final round of The Honda Classic golf tournament. Woods plans to play this week at Doral. / Brad Barr USA TODAY Sports

by Steve DiMeglio, USA TODAY Sports

by Steve DiMeglio, USA TODAY Sports

The world's No. 1 player, who pulled out with five holes to play in the final round of last week's Honda Classic because of back spasms and a lower back injury, said Wednesday at Trump National Doral that he will make his 12:39 p.m. ET tee time with Adam Scott and Henrik Stenson for Thursday's first round of the World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship.

"I feel better. I feel good," Woods, the defending champion, said in a press conference before he went to see the revamped Blue Monster for the first time. Woods, who said he hit just a few shots on Tuesday since withdrawing on Sunday â?? the longest shot he hit was 60 yards â?? planned to just walk the course and chip and putt. Woods said he "literally couldn't twist anymore" before he walked off the Champions Course after 13 holes in the Honda Classic. He said it got to the point "where I'm going to be doing probably more harm than good."

"It's been a long couple days of treatment, non-stop, to get everything calmed down," added Woods, who has won four times at Doral. "The back feels good."

Woods, who has walked off the golf course before completing the round four times in the last five years, said "a bad back is no joke."

"As we get older, and I've learned it as I've aged, I don't quite heal as fast as I used to. I just don't bounce back like I used to. That's just part of aging," said Woods, 38, who has dealt with knee, back, elbow, and neck and Achilles problems throughout his years. "There are times watching my kids run around, I wish I could do that again. They just bounce right up, bruises and all and they are gone in a day. It's just not that way anymore. But you've just got to take a more global look at it sometimes and take a step back. We try to manage that all the time."

The latest injury may have changed Woods' thinking going forward and how he'll deal with injuries. When asked if he has begun to worry about the long-term effects his back injuries will have on his body, Woods said he is.

"I think we have to take a more global look at it, yeah, absolutely, because it comes and goes," Woods said about what he and his team of confidants will do in the future. "We've got to make sure that we do preventative things to make sure that it doesn't happen and adjust certain things, whether it's swing, lifting, whatever it may be, you have to make certain adjustments. We've done that throughout my entire career and this is no different."

Woods is off to the worst start of his 18-year professional career. In his first start, he missed the 54-hole cut at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines, where he's won eight times. The following week he tied for 41st in the Dubai Desert Classic. Then he withdrew after 67 holes in the Honda Classic.

Barring injury, Woods will play four rounds this week because there is no cut. He also is scheduled to defend his title in the Arnold Palmer Invitational in two weeks. Seeing as he has never played the week before the Masters, the Arnold Palmer Invitational will be his last competitive tournament before he goes for his fifth green jacket in the first major of the season.

Woods said he is more concerned about being healthy enough to tackle Augusta National than he is with getting in enough competitive rounds of golf. He mentioned that before he won his 14th and last major on a broken leg, the 2008 U.S. Open, he didn't play one competitive round for six weeks. He had knee surgery following the Masters that year.

"I think it's more important to keep my feels and making sure I can have my own feels I can call upon, and that comes from practice," Woods said "I didn't hit a lot of balls back then because my leg was busted, but I chipped and putted a ton. And so I still kept the feels in my hands and I think that's what saved me that week, that particular week, and has saved me in a bunch of week throughout my career.

" â?¦ I'm still kind of constantly looking at (the Masters), looking at managing myself through there and making sure everything's good. I want to be strong and fit and healthy to be able to play that golf course and give it my best. So looking at scheduling and practice sessions and training and all that stuff, we have taken a really good look at it and really tried to come up with a good plan so that I can compete and play and be ready and try and win my fifth jacket."